Study Shows How Humans Can Echolocate 136
sciencehabit writes: Blind from infancy, Daniel Kish learned as a young boy to judge his height while climbing trees by making rapid clicking noises and listening for their echoes off the ground. No one taught him the technique, which is now recognized as a human form of echolocation. Like Kish, a handful of blind echolocators worldwide have taught themselves to use clicks and echoes to navigate their surroundings with impressive ease — Kish can even ride his bike down the street. A study of sighted people newly trained to echolocate now suggests that the secret to Kish's skill isn't just supersensitive ears. Instead, the entire body, neck, and head are key to 'seeing' with sound — an insight that could assist blind people learning the skill.
Give me a ping... (Score:3)
Re:Give me a ping... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yes. I must be hungry.
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No, but I did initially read yours as "Echo-collate" and wondered what exactly you do for a living.
Re:Give me a ping... (Score:4, Funny)
$ echo locate
locate
$
IT WORKS
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Anybody else read the headline as "Study Shows How Humans Can Echocolate"?
I first thought it said "eat chocolate", but I guess I was hungry.... :/
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Everybody already knows that chicks can do that.
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I read it as "Study Shows How Humans Can Eat Chocholate"
It was very confusing until I reread it for the third time.
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at first, i thought it was about a cocoa alternative to e-cigarettes
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Absolutely. Then I want and had some dark chocolate because someone somewhere said it was good for me.
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So, how about (Score:2)
Since the operation is performed with fixed ears and the angle of the ears must be changed to catch the various reflections...
Seems to me that there are two obvious technological solutions.
First, one could create a 360 degree sensor on the horizontal plane (Collinear with the ground), that listened for returns, and shifts/recasts them in frequency based on the return angle, then sends the mixed tones on to the ear. So tone is angle(s), and delay is radius. One obvious initial benefit is that echoes can be s
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That it can be done is old news - sounds like this is beginning to understand HOW it can be done. Like that guy who could levitate without understanding the science behind it, who let scientists study him in action so they could unlock the secrets of antigravity and eventually produce the cheap, efficient flying cars we all drive today.
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Daredevil has been doing it for even longer.
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I was thinking Toph, from Avatar: The Last Airbender.
Toph is awesome. [youtube.com]
Chocolate (Score:4, Funny)
I read that as "eat chocolate" even after readreading it twice. I still would've been interested, though, since it's toxic to some mammals.
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Funny, I was just going to post that same thing. I keep parsing it as "eat chocolate".
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I came close - I kept thinking "But eChocolate is a noun, not a verb!"
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I would think it's obvious, 'e does it (points off stage)
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Actually it's toxic to us as well, just a bit less so. If you eat a lot of raw, unprocessed chocolate (which has a higher concentration of toxic theobromine than most processed forms), you're likely to have some problems yourself.
Theobromine Oral toxicity LD50 (mg/kg)
Cat ---------- 200
Dog --------- 300
Human -- 1,000
Mouse ----- 837
Rat ------- 1,265
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Well, we have two things going for us.
First, we can tolerate a lot more theobromine. Second, we're heavier and thus we can take in a lot more theobromine on an absolute basis.
Third, our livers process theobromine a lot faster - a dog or cat's problem with chocolate is that they can
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Huh, hadn't heard about the slower liver processing before, but wikipedia does state a biological half-life for theobromine of 17.5 hours for dogs, versus the 7.1 hours (presumably for humans) in the non-poisoning theobromine article. So they get poisoned by much less and remain poisoned for much longer - not a good combination. Especially combined with the fact that they're, well, dogs. "I eat therefore I am" and all that.
Haha, very funny... (Score:5, Interesting)
You guys can cack as many jokes as you want but being able to navigate in pitch darkness using echolocation is a pretty awesome skill to have.
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My only reaction to this article is "Duh". We use echolocation every single day, most people are too 'blind' to actually consciously process it.
No. To use echolocation would imply that you're making the sound yourself trying to find where it reflects back to you and people generally don't do that. Even in pitch dark most will try using their night vision or feel their way around rather than making noises to nobody in particular. Picking out the direction a sound is coming from or noticing obstacles altering the sound is not the same.
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Actually, I tend to use ambient sound. You can hear a wall approaching without making a sound yourself.
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I don't think so. People with normal eyesight probably lack this ability entirely, mainly due to a lack of "hardware" that has to be developed over time. There was some research done that found that the visual cortex can eventually rewire itself to process audio instead. That said, you'd have to be blind at a relatively young age to "learn" this skill, and you'd also need a functioning visual cortex. (Some blind people are blind solely because of a non-functional visual cortex. If they ever picked up this a
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No actually anyone can supposedly do it,
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That's not what I'm seeing:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technol... [www.cbc.ca]
If what's described in that article is correct, then this isn't happening without a functioning visual cortex.
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Re:Haha, very funny... (Score:5, Funny)
You guys can cack as many jokes as you want but being able to navigate in pitch darkness using echolocation is a pretty awesome skill to have.
Especially when there is a blackout and you are looking for your chocolate.
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You guys can cack as many jokes as you want but being able to navigate in pitch darkness using echolocation is a pretty awesome skill to have.
Especially when there is a blackout and you are looking for your chocolate.
Mmmmmm..... chocolate.....
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Well, usually not a lot of echos in that scenario, except as confounding factors. So more sonic-location than echo-. On the other hand if you walk into a large room in the dark you probably have a sense of it's size before flipping on the lights due to the change in the reverberation of your footsteps. That would probably be getting at least borderline.
No, that was stereo hearing (Score:2)
There is a reason we have two ears -- to be able to distinguish the direction the sound is coming from!
But it is not actively clicking and listening to the echo (though probably it would work much worse for a blind person who is also deaf on one ear!)...
Paul B.
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Most of us actually have this skill and use it, perhaps without realizing it. We go a step further, though: we are passive echolocators. We don't click, but we listen for the multiple echoes of sounds that are emitted by other things, including other people.
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It's one of the potential reasons that people who stand in an anechoic chamber (I had the opportunity to many years ago now and it was an eerie sensation) can feel very unsteady on their feet.
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I concur. There's one in a science museum I go to often, and it never fails to make me feel wobbly.
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It is not that hard (Score:2)
for basic use. I have done it myself when in the dark. Slowly, and carefully of course, but usable. I have no doubt that training can turn it into an impressive tool.
over 40 comments so far and no one (Score:5, Interesting)
and no one has mentioned Daredevil?
Either turn in your geek cred cards, or admit that the Ben Affleck movie was so terrible that you've erased any mention of Daredevil from your minds....
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What are you talking about?
All Ben Affleck movies are terrible, you're going to have to be more specific.
Dwardovil? Never heard of it.
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Real geeks read the comics and piss and moan that the movies suck donkey's balls.
Nothing new (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyone can do this. You're probably even aware of it if you're married.
You arrive home after work, walk in through the garage and immediately know somethings different but you don't know what it is. You round the corner and your wife has bought a new rug... or cabinet... or something. Do you have ESP? No... the room "sounds" different. How do you know when someones creeping up behind you? Same thing...
I used to deer hunt with my father, and his tree stand was insanely high at over 70ft (he liked to think of himself as a sniper) and you could definitely hear the difference when you were the high in the trees than if you were in my stand which was at a much less terrifying 20ft off the ground.
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Are you sure you just haven't been rigorously conditioned to come in and assume she's done something that you need to identify?
'Cuz, really, I have no idea of WTF you're talking about.
Then again,
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I am sure that some people are better or more sensitive to this sort of thing than others. Personally, I've been a musician for decades. So Sound is something I've very keyed in on. I can be laying on the couch and know if one of my totally silent cats enters the room. Something furry like that definitely impacts the sound. It's something I've noticed for a long time. I can actually follow a moving object around the room with my hearing.
Now, I should clarify, my house is all 1950s hardwood floors. So a furr
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No, that disability probably makes it more likely you will be happily married.
Khoisan languages (Score:2)
I do it a bit. (Score:2)
You mean everyone hasn't learned how to do that to some extent?
I do it a bit.
I get a sensation of presence of something nearby when there IS something close and I am making sounds I know I'm making (mouth clicks, footsteps, etc.) in an otherwise reasonably quiet environment, or when well-locatable sounds with bursty high-frequency components are present in the environment to provide a sonic "light source" of suitable form and predictability.
It's usually enough to keep from bumping into things. (Even soft,
We echolocate all the time (Score:1)
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When we walk through traffic and hear cars coming up on us, or know people's position in a room from the direction and magnitude of their voice. It's no surprise that someone lacking an important sense like sight will have much better developed echolocation ability.
No, what you're talking about is more like passive sonar. Echolocation is an active form of sonar.
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Or even more accurately "hearing with both ears" because the stereo sound field is processed by the brainworks computrons to sense direction of sounds etc
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Have someone blindfold you and walk you back and forth through a door between a tiny and huge room (say between an auditorium and the attached AV room) in a situation without any change in the flooring. Talk, click, clap your hands, whatever, and I bet it doesn't take you long before you can detect the exact moment when you step through the doorway.
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I'm not sure it's something that can be consciencely heard, they just learn to echolocate.
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When we walk through traffic and hear cars coming up on us, or know people's position in a room from the direction and magnitude of their voice. It's no surprise that someone lacking an important sense like sight will have much better developed echolocation ability.
That's hardly echo location. That's just stereo hearing. The best example I have of that is when I'm skiing - I process where people skiing behind me are by using 2 ears, so that I don't suddenly turn in front of them. No sound generation or echos required....
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He turns it up to 11
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With Dark Silence, bitches!! :-P
Silence which is so quiet it can't even be detected, only theorized!
Timing or volume? Double distance = 1/10th as loud (Score:2)
TFA says (assumes?) that these people's brains measure the tiny difference in how long it takes for the echo to come back. Perhaps, but for every doubling of distance, the strength (spl) of the echo drops by about 90%. That seems like a much, much easier thing for humans to detect. I know the change in reflected volume is obvious when I'm driving next to a concrete wall versus an open lane.
-- Technical details --
Yes, my subject line says "loud", then I gave a measurement in sound pressure level (SPL). I
Torso and Head and "Seeing" (Score:2)
Instead, the entire body, neck, and head are key to 'seeing' with sound
The way this is written up, it makes it sound like the body/head are part of the sensors.
When you read the article, you find the significance is that in one scenario, the blindfolded participants "couldnâ(TM)t move their heads or torsos" and were unable to navigate a virtual corridor. So it's not that the body/head are part of the listening, it's that the person wasn't able to move their ears to listen from different locations. By the same logic, your body/head are key to "seeing" with your eyes ..
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Parallels could be drawn to RADAR or SONAR, because it is SONAR. And RADAR is just SONAR with radio waves instead of sound. It's nothing like Synthetic Aperture RARAR, which relies of phase correlations between many hundreds (or thousands) of separate radar pings.
The important bit of SAR is not that there are hundreds/thousands of separate radar pings, it's that the effective aperture is increased by moving the antenna around to collect signal returns from multiple locations serially.
Note how the ability to move the head/torso (and thus ears) was important to successful navigating. That means the brain is collecting extra information from the movement. Would be interesting to measure how much freedom of motion is needed.
Up From Dragons (Score:1)
This topic was covered about a decade ago in the truly excellent Up From Dragons: The Evolution of Human Intelligence [wikipedia.org]. One of the authors is Dorion Sagan, son of Carl Sagan, who wrote the also-excellent Dragons of Eden [wikipedia.org]. A bit outdated, perhaps, but the concepts and ideas stand. I cannot recommend them enough.
The bike riding is less than impressive.. (Score:5, Informative)
Batman (Score:1)
Da-na-na na-na na-na Batmaaan!
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I think your sig needs hospitalization. Probably in intensive cares... ;-) ;-)
J.J. Gibson already said this (Score:1)
The noted perceptual psychologist and founder of ecological psychology already stated this in his The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception. He states that visual perception doesn't involve just the brain and the eyes, it is dependent upon the head, neck, and the entire body. Although he was referring to visual perception specifically, he regarded all modalities as being dependent upon the body and it's parts in relation to one another and in relation to the environmental layout. His theories have largel
Artificial Clicker/ (Score:3)
I wonder if some sort of artificial pulse generator would be an improvement, rather than producing the clicks yourself.
You'd be guaranteed repeatability and might be able to shape the pulses in order to get a better result. Would differently formed clicks work better at different ranges or with different surfaces?
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Too long in front of the computer (Score:2)
It took nearly a minute before I realised that this article is not in fact about electronically transmitting aspects of a certain popular confectionery.
echolocate != echocolate
I thought it was about eyaculating chocolat (Score:2)
ROFLMAO... I was reading e-chocolate X-D and I thought they figured out how to make you cum chocolate
Fuck! Now it will take me hours to stop laughing... fuckssake mates, use hypens XD
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I've noticed a similar effect, though I haven't really thought much about *what* qualitative change I'm hearing. Makes sense though - water changes density with temperature, so it's acoustic properties should also change.
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Not only you're not alone, this is a rather common physics experiment (or should be), but it doesn't have much to do with density - it doesn't change fast enough with temperature. But there is something about water that changes rapidly as you go from cold to hot water: viscosity.
Water's viscosity decreases rather dramatically with temperature - about 25% per 10deg C or so. The Reynolds number, a key descriptor of the fluid flow in a given situation, is inversely proportional to viscosity, with factor 1. Thu
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Ah, that would make a lot more sense, and thus is my personal world-myth is yet again updated with a more plausible explanation in the face of contradictory evidence. Ain't science wonderful?
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I always thought this was the pipe, the faucet head and aerator and sink changing temp. Not the water itself.
You can hear the difference between a mug of hot water and a mug of cold water if you tap the outside of the mug with a spoon as well. That doesn't have any turbulent flow to it...
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Sure, but with changing viscosity the sound propagation in the liquid changes - especially that the quality of the resonance in the liquid scales with viscosity (viscous damping!). The speed of sound in the liquid changes too, but the change in the 0-60C range is about a factor of magnitude smaller than the change in viscosity.
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I do something like this when I'm in the bathroom at work.
I can literally turn on a faucet here without touching the temperature of the water and the instant the water starts coming out warm I can hear the sound difference.
It's like the sound gets more "noisy" and less "linear" when it's hot water coming out. I can even tell as it's warming up since the pitch changes as well then holds steady at full-hot.
Anyone else do this? I'm starting to wonder if I'm alone here.
It's more likely a change in the physical dimensions of the pipe with temperature, rather than anything to do with the density of water. The pipe expands and its resonant frequency decreases.